Possible Dark Matter Signal Spotted
TaleSlinger sends this news from Space.com:
Astronomers may finally have detected a signal of dark matter, the mysterious and elusive stuff thought to make up most of the material universe. While poring over data collected by the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton spacecraft, a team of researchers spotted an odd spike in X-ray emissions coming from two different celestial objects — the Andromeda galaxy and the Perseus galaxy cluster.
"The signal's distribution within the galaxy corresponds exactly to what we were expecting with dark matter — that is, concentrated and intense in the center of objects and weaker and diffuse on the edges," [assuming that dark matter consists of sterile neutrinos] study co-author Oleg Ruchayskiy, of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland, said in a statement. "With the goal of verifying our findings, we then looked at data from our own galaxy, the Milky Way, and made the same observations," added lead author Alexey Boyarsky, of EPFL and Leiden University in the Netherlands. The decay of sterile neutrinos is thought to produce X-rays, so the research team suspects these may be the dark matter particles responsible for the mysterious signal coming from Andromeda and the Perseus cluster."
"The signal's distribution within the galaxy corresponds exactly to what we were expecting with dark matter — that is, concentrated and intense in the center of objects and weaker and diffuse on the edges," [assuming that dark matter consists of sterile neutrinos] study co-author Oleg Ruchayskiy, of the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland, said in a statement. "With the goal of verifying our findings, we then looked at data from our own galaxy, the Milky Way, and made the same observations," added lead author Alexey Boyarsky, of EPFL and Leiden University in the Netherlands. The decay of sterile neutrinos is thought to produce X-rays, so the research team suspects these may be the dark matter particles responsible for the mysterious signal coming from Andromeda and the Perseus cluster."
Does this basic principle of scientific inquiry not apply to cosmology????
See what I did there? Ehh...? EEHHHH?!
An eye on this thread. In the future. :>
Congratulations tho the ESA
Much more important than the obsession with proving that it is dark matter and not a limit of the relativity models, we'd actually have a real name for the stuff.
"Dark matter" was a lame filler term from day one. If it turns out to be abundant masses of sterile neutrinos, then we can all go look up what "sterile" means in regards to a particle type that is already infamous for ignoring everything else until it rams into a proton or neutron in a head-on crash.
Perseus?
It's Omicron Persei 8 complaining about the cancellation of Single Female Lawyer.
You sound like the kind of guy who goes around the neighborhood putting penises on all the snowmen.
The paper on which the space.com article is based is almost year old. It appeared in February 2014. Why is this piece of old news here ?
The decay of sterile neutrinos is thought to produce X-rays, so the research team suspects these may be the dark matter particles responsible for the mysterious signal coming from Andromeda and the Perseus cluster."
Back in my days, every mysterious signal from every star system follows a well rehearsed routine. People get beamed down, they see even more mysterious things happen and finally they get everything resolved and are back in the Enterprise in 46 minutes, all set up and ready to boldly go where no man had gone before. Come on, resolve it already scientists. Whats the matter with you lazy bums?
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
This is really old news (at least in the particle physics cycle) and over a 100 papers have been written about this already. This is one of many papers that points out serious problems with a dark matter interpretation for this signal http://arxiv.org/abs/1408.1699 and here's a less technical blog post discussing the issues http://resonaances.blogspot.co... . I'm sick of pop-sci websites peddling stuff that particle physicists have already moved on from as the "latest exciting discovery"
I can only wonder how the researchers arrived at their conclusion when there are so very many other sources of X-rays in the universe. In fact if you were looking far dark matter you would ignore any signal coming from a galaxy and only look for signals coming from *outside* the galaxy, which is where dark matter is believed to exist.
It's the leftover Singularity formation zones from the Archaen/Kelvin war and their use of Omega Particles.
It's all Explained in Star Trek Oddesy!
Ah fuck it anything will do.
The decay of sterile neutrinos is thought to produce X-rays, so the research team suspects these may be the dark matter particles responsible for the mysterious signal coming from Andromeda and the Perseus cluster.
Would these sterile neutrinos be all the dark matter that models hypothesize? Or only one subset of it?
Unless the decay rate is very low, the x-ray flux from something that makes up the majority of the matter in our universe could cook everything nearby.
Have gnu, will travel.
there is no dm
Real science is not only hard and expensive...to most people it is largely incomprehensible. Pop-Sci websites capitalize on this fact. Since there is money in it, you can count on there being plenty more of it.
It's black sheep, in an interstellar coal mine, with dark matter flashlights.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Astronomer A: "Do you see anything in the telescope eyepiece?"
Astronomer B: "Nope. Nothing."
Astronomer A: "Yaaay! That means WE discovered Dark Matter!"
Astronomer B: "So, do we get a Nobel?"
Astronomer A: "It already came. Didn't you see it?"
Astronomer B: "Nope."
Astronomer A: "That's because it arrived in a Dark Box."
Table-ized A.I.
Because it doesn't exist.
What's it like getting your ass kicked by apk + downmodding to hide it 20x http://tech.slashdot.org/comme... ?